1,760 research outputs found
Fundamental Limits of Caching in Wireless D2D Networks
We consider a wireless Device-to-Device (D2D) network where communication is
restricted to be single-hop. Users make arbitrary requests from a finite
library of files and have pre-cached information on their devices, subject to a
per-node storage capacity constraint. A similar problem has already been
considered in an ``infrastructure'' setting, where all users receive a common
multicast (coded) message from a single omniscient server (e.g., a base station
having all the files in the library) through a shared bottleneck link. In this
work, we consider a D2D ``infrastructure-less'' version of the problem. We
propose a caching strategy based on deterministic assignment of subpackets of
the library files, and a coded delivery strategy where the users send linearly
coded messages to each other in order to collectively satisfy their demands. We
also consider a random caching strategy, which is more suitable to a fully
decentralized implementation. Under certain conditions, both approaches can
achieve the information theoretic outer bound within a constant multiplicative
factor. In our previous work, we showed that a caching D2D wireless network
with one-hop communication, random caching, and uncoded delivery, achieves the
same throughput scaling law of the infrastructure-based coded multicasting
scheme, in the regime of large number of users and files in the library. This
shows that the spatial reuse gain of the D2D network is order-equivalent to the
coded multicasting gain of single base station transmission. It is therefore
natural to ask whether these two gains are cumulative, i.e.,if a D2D network
with both local communication (spatial reuse) and coded multicasting can
provide an improved scaling law. Somewhat counterintuitively, we show that
these gains do not cumulate (in terms of throughput scaling law).Comment: 45 pages, 5 figures, Submitted to IEEE Transactions on Information
Theory, This is the extended version of the conference (ITW) paper
arXiv:1304.585
Energy-Delay Tradeoff and Dynamic Sleep Switching for Bluetooth-Like Body-Area Sensor Networks
Wireless technology enables novel approaches to healthcare, in particular the
remote monitoring of vital signs and other parameters indicative of people's
health. This paper considers a system scenario relevant to such applications,
where a smart-phone acts as a data-collecting hub, gathering data from a number
of wireless-capable body sensors, and relaying them to a healthcare provider
host through standard existing cellular networks. Delay of critical data and
sensors' energy efficiency are both relevant and conflicting issues. Therefore,
it is important to operate the wireless body-area sensor network at some
desired point close to the optimal energy-delay tradeoff curve. This tradeoff
curve is a function of the employed physical-layer protocol: in particular, it
depends on the multiple-access scheme and on the coding and modulation schemes
available. In this work, we consider a protocol closely inspired by the
widely-used Bluetooth standard. First, we consider the calculation of the
minimum energy function, i.e., the minimum sum energy per symbol that
guarantees the stability of all transmission queues in the network. Then, we
apply the general theory developed by Neely to develop a dynamic scheduling
policy that approaches the optimal energy-delay tradeoff for the network at
hand. Finally, we examine the queue dynamics and propose a novel policy that
adaptively switches between connected and disconnected (sleeping) modes. We
demonstrate that the proposed policy can achieve significant gains in the
realistic case where the control "NULL" packets necessary to maintain the
connection alive, have a non-zero energy cost, and the data arrival statistics
corresponding to the sensed physical process are bursty.Comment: Extended version (with proofs details in the Appendix) of a paper
accepted for publication on the IEEE Transactions on Communication
Algorithmic Aspects of Energy-Delay Tradeoff in Multihop Cooperative Wireless Networks
We consider the problem of energy-efficient transmission in delay constrained
cooperative multihop wireless networks. The combinatorial nature of cooperative
multihop schemes makes it difficult to design efficient polynomial-time
algorithms for deciding which nodes should take part in cooperation, and when
and with what power they should transmit. In this work, we tackle this problem
in memoryless networks with or without delay constraints, i.e., quality of
service guarantee. We analyze a wide class of setups, including unicast,
multicast, and broadcast, and two main cooperative approaches, namely: energy
accumulation (EA) and mutual information accumulation (MIA). We provide a
generalized algorithmic formulation of the problem that encompasses all those
cases. We investigate the similarities and differences of EA and MIA in our
generalized formulation. We prove that the broadcast and multicast problems
are, in general, not only NP hard but also o(log(n)) inapproximable. We break
these problems into three parts: ordering, scheduling and power control, and
propose a novel algorithm that, given an ordering, can optimally solve the
joint power allocation and scheduling problems simultaneously in polynomial
time. We further show empirically that this algorithm used in conjunction with
an ordering derived heuristically using the Dijkstra's shortest path algorithm
yields near-optimal performance in typical settings. For the unicast case, we
prove that although the problem remains NP hard with MIA, it can be solved
optimally and in polynomial time when EA is used. We further use our algorithm
to study numerically the trade-off between delay and power-efficiency in
cooperative broadcast and compare the performance of EA vs MIA as well as the
performance of our cooperative algorithm with a smart noncooperative algorithm
in a broadcast setting.Comment: 12 pages, 9 figure
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